Quote Originally Posted by Stoner Shadow Wolf
"father" = subconsciousness
"Son" = physical consciousness
"holy spirit" = superconsciousness.


supposedly the creater of the veil which seperates the three conscious minds is losing controll over said veil, and reintegration of the father, son, and holy spirit will occour over time, as the veil falls.
I believe that the father, son, and holy spirit are three faces to the shape that is God. If God were truley God, than he isn't limited, like we are, to being a "single thing". God is the creator, but Jesus says "even before the creation there I am". "I am" is something only God uses for identification. Jesus is also called the second Adam. This makes sense if we were origionally created as children of God (not physically but spiritually). Since the bible also says that we fell away from God, we have to assume that when God sent his only son, he had to create a human being with a little bit of 'him' in him...you might even say "all" of him. In otherwords, God has created man, man has fallen, so God has come back to get us...Jesus is the "son of man" in the physical sense that he was brought into the creation and "born" as a decendent of the same blood that we all have (Adam and Eve's), and yet he is the "son of God" because spiritually he consisted of only Godliness. If God is "all that isn't bad", and Jesus was without any bad, than one is left to believe that all that was in Jesus was God.
My understanding of the holy spirit is a little less developed, but I believe that it's that "holy spirit" means that bit of God's spirit that he sometimes puts in people. God's "holiness in spirit form" is, in the bible, used to give people love, strength, faith, knowledge, wisdom, and anything else "Godly", moreso than it is an actual seperate identity.

now of course we have all these people in a room squabbling over the different little reasons they shouldn't believe in it, but it's so theologically complex (and yet the concept is so simply perfect) that I just have to believe it to be more than just filling the gap of the unknown with whatever "seems to fit."